My Jamaican Family

Followers

About Me

I was born in Jamaica and lived there till I got married and eventually moved to Canada. After a long career in a large urban public library I now work part-time in local history. I have been involved for many years in genealogical research and my main interests lie in finding out more about my Jamaican family history. I hope in my musings to show the methods I used to find out more about my family.
The contents of this blog are protected by copyright. Violation of this copyright will be subject to legal action.

Friday, 25 March 2016

Before going further I
should explain how I found out about Jacob and Selina in the first place.The cardinal rule of family history research
is that you start with yourself and move back, working from the known to the
unknown.I knew very little about my
father’s family because he did not speak much about them. I knew that he had
siblings … two brothers, Leo and Joe, and a sister, Essie, and that all three
lived in the United States having left Jamaica. My Dad was the one who remained
behind to take care of his mother who had been widowed in 1917. I have no idea
how she was left financially, but it appeared that my father felt responsible
for her and as a result he and my mother postponed their marriage for some
time. What I did know about my grandmother Levy was that she had been a Da
Costa and had two brothers, Joe and Melbourne.This I learned from my uncle, Rodney Smedmore, my mother’s brother …
certainly not from my father who rarely spoke about his family. At any rate, we
had no connections whatsoever with the Da Costas, but did visit my grandmother
who lived at 22 Beeston Street, across the way from the Smedmore home at 49
Beeston Street.

Thanks to a friend who discovered an item in the Jamaica
Gleaner I had my first clue about my grandmother’s parentage.

So I now had a name for my
great grandfather, Jacob Rodrigues Da Costa, but at this time I didn’t know who
his wife was. However, as I researched the family of Leopold and Alice Levy and
found birth records for their seven children (three of whom died in infancy), a
name kept cropping up as informant on various registrations, a Selina D’Costa,
and occasionally a Mrs. J. R. D’Costa..Here is the birth registration for the eldest child, Daisy, who was born
23rd December 1886 –

Daisy died 23rd
December 1887 and the informant on her death record was Selina D’Costa,
grandmother! She was also the informant on the birth registrations of my
father, Michael, and his sister Essie, and on the death record for the eldest
boy, Lucien, who died in 1890 at the age or two, and there again she is listed as
grandmother. (My grandfather, Leopold, was a travelling merchant whose name
appears as informant only twice on these events, on the births of two sons,
Lucien and Gustave, both of whom died in infancy.)

So, with at least a first
name, Selina and the name of my grandfather I had information to give my
researcher, Cheryl, to search the Catholic records.

Based on the fact that my
grandmother and my father were both Catholic (though my parents had been
married in the Anglican Church) it seemed the most likely place to research,
and indeed that’s where Cheryl struck gold!

Selina Jane Roberts and
Jacob Rodrigues Da Costa were married in the Catholic faith on 18th
June 1846 --

"On the 18th of June
1846 Rev. W. Cotham joined in holy wedlock, according to the rules of the
Catholic Church, Jacob Rodrigues DaCosta and Selina Jane Roberts, both natives
of Jamaica.In presence of Henry Roberts
and Bernard Ripoll."

No mention is made of
parents of either the bride or groom.As
I’ve never been able to find a baptismal record for Selina I know nothing about her parentage, though it’s possible that the Henry Roberts who served as a witness
might have been a relative. Assuming that Jacob Rodrigues Da Costa was Jewish
then there’s no way that they would have been married in the synagogue and so
they were married in the bride’s faith.It was not unusual in Jamaica for Jews to marry outside of their
religion, or even to be married in the Catholic faith, nor did they, or any
other non-Catholic person marrying into that faith have to convert to
Catholicism, but they did have to agree to have the children of that marriage
baptized and brought up in the faith. This was indeed the case with the ten
children of Jacob and Selina. Cheryl found baptismal records for all ten
children. (Later, these records became available thanks to Patricia Jackson who
was able to transcribe many of the Catholic records on her website, Jamaican
Family Search, now freely available at http://www.jamaicanfamilysearch.com/
)

Of these ten children the only ones I was able to learn
more about were my grandmother, Alice, and her two older brothers, Joseph and
Melbourne. Joseph married Hannah Lindo in 1888 and his marriage record shows
his father’s name as Jacob R. Da Costa.

So too does that of Melbourne, who married Abigail
Henriques DeSouza and later reverted to the Jewish faith. Another record which
confirmed Alice’s parentage is the death record for Selina Da Costa who died in
1892 at the residence of her son, Melbourne.

So, my next project was to find out what I could
about my great grandfather, Jacob Rodrigues Da Costa, no easy task, as you will
see.